When I was a little boy, I was obsessed with an unusual question. I wanted to know why I was here — and why I was part of my family.
Most children ask a lot of “why” questions. I did, too. But the question that fascinated me most wasn’t why the sky was blue or why birds could fly. I wanted to know what I was supposed to be — and to answer that, I first had to answer a more fundamental question: Why was I here?
Somehow, when I was about 3 years old, I reached a conclusion. I don’t remember how I arrived there, but I became convinced that I was part of my family because I was there to help.
One day, my parents were unloading groceries from the car. While they were carrying bags into the house, I quietly went outside, got a huge box of Tide detergent out of the trunk and tried to carry it inside myself.
The box was much too heavy, so I found my little red wagon. By the time my mother discovered what I was doing and took a picture, I was struggling to load the box into the wagon so I could pull it to the house. I managed to drag it only a few feet before giving up in tears.
Looking back, I don’t think that’s just a cute story about an overly ambitious little boy.
Nobody had asked me to help. Nobody had assigned me a chore. My behavior flowed naturally from the answer I had reached to a single question. I believed I was there to help, so helping simply seemed like the obvious thing to do.
I’ve been thinking lately that this may be true of all of us. The quality of our lives depends less on the answers we’ve found than on which questions we’ve chosen to organize our lives around.

Looking at the stars makes me feel connected, not insignificant
How can a child process seeing his mother trying to stab father?
The Cain Train becomes train wreck when candidate has to think on feet
What if Jesus was serious about commands he gave his followers?
Maybe it’s so hard to love others because we don’t love ourselves
Finding joy brings more happiness than the empty pursuit of pleasure
Unless you oppose all coercion, ‘resistance’ claim rings hollow
Lesson from U2: Rejection doesn’t necessarily mean it’s time to give up